I was all ready to post on several new books I just acquired in a little buying spree (my excuse is that it's a warmup for the Friends of the San Francisco Public Library Book Sale happening on Tuesday—it's so important to properly warm up for a big sale!). But then, typically, I was completely distracted by the book plate inside one of them and off I went, despite the fact that there are many other things I should be doing today.
The book...
...was reviewed on the Margin Notes blog a while back (nearly a year ago, in fact), but I only just stumbled across it recently. The book sounded charming, but it wasn't until I noticed a quite reasonably priced copy on Amazon during my little buying spree last week that my resistance broke down. The book is irresistible, and who would expect an almost completely intact and well-preserved dust cover on a title published in 1958? (I also didn't notice until just now that the review compared Clover Cottage to Gwendoline Courtney's Sally's Family, a copy of which, as it happens, I ordered in the same buying spree, without consciously recalling any association between the two—my mind is an odd place to live in, needless to say.)
So, the book is lovely and all, and promises to be an enjoyable and relaxing read when all my present woes have faded into the past. But then I opened the book and found one of my favorite things—a book plate from a previous owner. Non-fetishists of old books may find it inexplicable, but most readers of this blog will understand that evidence of a book's history—especially when the previous owner(s) must have been as careful and conscientious with it as this one's owner(s) was/were—only add to its charms.
Fair enough, and a kind thank you to Margaret for having provided such a good home to the book before it made its way to me for adoption. But as I was trying to avoid doing more responsible, practical things today, I started wondering what nature of place Couch's Mill might be, and once I had Googled it, I knew I would lose at least an hour or two that could have been more practically (but not more enjoyably) spent.
Ah the powers of Google:
Above is the hamlet of Couch's Mill, in Cornwall. It is, I learned from Wikipedia, about 1.5 miles from the village of Lerryn, which boasts a village school with 30 pupils and a stepping-stone path across the River Lerryn which immediately evoked scenes from Margery Sharp's The Stone of Chastity:
In addition, Lerryn is reputed to have been an inspiration for the setting of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows. (I can't imagine what it must be like living in England, where you can't spit without hitting a piece of literary history. How does one ever focus on day-to-day life without being distracted by the fact that Charles Dickens once watched a chimney sweep here and Virginia Woolf once bought a hat there?!)
The nearest proper town to Couch's Mill is Lostwithiel, which boasts a population of about 2,000 people and a beautiful 12th century bridge across the River Fowey:
It also boasts a lovely Methodist Church:
After I had familiarized myself a bit with the environs of Couch's Mill, I thought I was finished. I mean, Google Streetview wouldn't work in as isolated a spot as Couch's Mill, right?
Well, wrong. I was able to navigate to this lovely house right in the middle of Couch's Mill, complete with fingerpost pointing the way to Lerryn and Lostwithiel. And who would imagine that one can even use Google to vicariously experience a quiet drive in the British countryside?
Alas, despite spending a lovely quarter hour or so careening about the countryside with the Google van, I never located a church in Couch's Mill. Probably it was to Lerryn that Margaret Brown so faithfully made her trek to attend Sunday school. Or perhaps even to that lovely church in Lostwithiel?
But what I did locate was an absolute determination that our next big trip (after Italy this fall, of course) will be back to the U.K. to explore some of the breathtaking countryside.
And all that from a used book purchased for $8!
The only thing that remains is for Margaret Brown to come across this post someday and give us her personal view of growing up in such an idyllic (if perhaps rather quiet?) locale.
off the beaten page: lesser-known British, Irish, & American women writers 1910-1960
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But it can still be a pain, and if you can't get any of that to work, please email me at furrowed.middlebrow@gmail.com. I do want to hear from you!
I love what you've done with this post - that moment when you open a book and see the traces of another reader's life: a lovely post. I definitely fall into the fetishist camp!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Vicki. The post just sort of took on a life of its own!
DeleteMe too. Lovely post & what beautiful pictures of Cornwall. The book looks interesting too, looking forward to a review.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lyn. I'm sure I won't be able to resist diving into the book before long, so hopefully a review will follow soon.
DeleteI always knew you were a man after my own heart, Scott. And this sounds like a truly Dessian kind of pilgrimage.
ReplyDeleteDid you look for the cottage on the book jacket, too?
I love the idea of warming up for the Big Sale. So wise.
Thank you, Susan. Who knows? Maybe there will be a follow-up tracing the book's settings too! And then we can visit them on our next trip...
DeletePeregrinations are ALWAYS to be encouraged- thanks for this one!
ReplyDeletePerry ( short for.....)
Thank you, Peregr-, er, Perry!
DeleteDelightful post, Scott! Thank you for taking us along for the ride, all from such a fascinating book plate. Glad you couldn't resist!
ReplyDeletedel
(curlsnskirls.wordpress.com)
Thanks, Del! I had a lot of fun with this post. Have you ever noticed how enjoyable such things are when you're trying to avoid doing real work?
DeleteWhat a delightful post, Scott! Thanks for the lovely trip around England today!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Peggy. I think I'm going to have to use Google Streetview to visit a few more of my most coveted U.K. scenic sites. It will have to tide me over until my next visit!
DeleteI loved this post! It's reassuring to know there are other readers who value what others might label "imperfections" in a used book. To me it makes the reading experience much more personal, knowing the physical copy of the book carries a story of its own, in addition to the story in its text. Anyways, thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bree. Yes, some of my favorite copies of books are those with inscriptions (especially WWII-era) or other personalization. And I could probably do a whole post on the things I've found in used books. 1970s Easter Seals, anyone?
DeleteOh, that's a good one! My recent favorite was a clipped out recipe for "Huntzburgers." Sometime in the early '60s it became a bookmark in a 1920 book about Quakers.
Delete